Heart allograft tolerance induced and maintained by Vascularized hind-limb transplant in rats

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Abstract

Organ/tissue transplantation has become an effective therapy for end-stage diseases. However, immunosuppression after transplantation may cause severe side effects. Donor-specific transplant tolerance was proposed to solve this problem. In this study, we report a novel method for inducing and maintaining heart allograft tolerance rats. First, we induced indefinite vascularized hind-limb allograft survival with a short-term antilymphocyte serum + Cyclosporine A treatment. Peripheral blood chimerism disappeared 6-7 weeks after immunosuppression was withdrawn. Then the recipients accepted secondary donor-strain skin and heart transplantation 200 days following vascularized hind-limb transplantation without any immunosuppression, but rejected third party skin allografts, a status of donor-specific tolerance. The ELISPOT results suggested a mechanism of clone deletion. These findings open new perspectives for the role of vascularized hind-limb transplant in the induction and maintenance of organ transplantation tolerance. © 2013 Quan Liu et al.

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Liu, Q., Wang, Y., Nakao, A., Zhang, W., Gorantla, V., & Zheng, X. X. (2013). Heart allograft tolerance induced and maintained by Vascularized hind-limb transplant in rats. Clinical and Developmental Immunology, 2013. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/483856

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